Acharya Prashant responds to a question about the disappointment that arises when the fruits of one's actions are not as expected. He counters by asking what happens when one does get the expected results, stating that in that case, the fruit itself takes over. He points out that while the questioner mentions the disappointment of not getting the desired outcome and losing faith in oneself, they fail to mention the plight that occurs when they do get what they want. To illustrate his point, he tells a story about a researcher visiting a mental asylum who asks to see the most dangerous and notorious inmates. He is first shown a man who went mad because he could not get the girl he loved; all his hopes were shattered. The researcher, disturbed, is then shown another, even more dangerous inmate, who is kept far away in a special cage. When asked what happened to him, the answer is that he got the girl he wanted. The speaker uses this story to highlight that the questioner has only mentioned the disappointment of unfulfilled desires but has hidden the story of what happens when desires are fulfilled. The real suffering comes not from what one doesn't get, but from what one does get. He concludes that the problem is not disappointment (nirasha), but hope (asha) itself. He says that if one were to become truly disappointed with oneself, one would be liberated. The real problem is that hope does not break despite repeated setbacks. The fruit that one truly needs cannot be obtained through personal hope. That is a different thing altogether, for which different qualities are needed. It requires dedication and spirituality; mere desire and lust will not suffice.